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Romans

Romans Chapter 4 - Be Continuously Credited Righteous By Faith

Be Continuously Credited Righteous By Faith How can we be continuously credited righteous by faith? Not only at the beginning, but also throughout, our life of faith? In Romans 4, Paul introduces the idea of being “credited as righteousness by faith” (4: 3). This idea is probably the most obvious when we first come to Christ. Before we have any good deeds, Jesus has already died for us. Salvation is gifted to us. By believing in God and in His power to save, we are deemed righteous before Him. Certainly, as Elder James has explained, a body without the spirit is dead, so is faith without deeds (James 2:26). To declare our faith, we must therefore receive water baptism, pray for the promised Holy Spirit, and study and practice God’s words in our everyday life.  Does that mean being ‘credited righteous by faith’ stops here? I want to further understand how this idea continues to work in our life of faith after coming to Christ. Here, I try to think through three case studies: Moses, David, and Job. What if God allowed Moses to enter the land of Canaan? After all, Moses’ merit in life far exceeded that one single venting. What if God did not spare David for his transgressions? Because they were notoriously outrageous. What if Job did get all the answers to why he suffered? After all, he was indeed just.  If all these ‘what ifs’ were true, we may forever believe that the goodness of one’s life, such as health, prosperity, and companionship, is a result of us ‘being good’. We may also believe that people suffer or ‘fail’ in life because they are ‘being bad’ or inadequate before God. Subsequently, when we encounter hardship and suffering ourselves, we question God’s faithfulness. If Christians have done their best in all things that are required of them, why do they still suffer like anyone else?  Sufferings are God’s constant reminder that we need to be credited righteous by faith everyday throughout our entire life. In sufferings, we want to continue to believe: By continuing to believe and to hold fast to God even in the face of trials and tribulations, we are credited righteous by faith in God’s eyes.

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Romans

Romans Chapter 3 - The God Who Showed Up at Court

While doom-scrolling on Tik Tok (don’t follow my example!), there was this video I saw of an old TV series where they had a kindly, elderly judge who would carry out judgements in his small courtroom.   And the people that stood before him had always interesting reasons as to why they are being charged in court and how he dealt with each one of them was very entertaining. There was one particular episode - where his childhood friend stood before him, charged with an offense. The courtroom held its breath. Would the judge show mercy? Or enforce the law? He did both. He pronounced the man guilty—because he was. But then he stepped down from the bench, took off his robe, and paid the fine himself. Justice. Mercy. One act. One heart. That story echoes the very heartbeat of Romans 3:25–26 (NIV) : “God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of his blood—to be received by faith… so as to be just and the one who justifies those who have faith in Jesus.” Let that soak in for a moment. God is the judge. And He’s also the one who takes the punishment. The law had to be fulfilled. Sin had to be dealt with. If God had ignored it, He wouldn't be just. But if He destroyed us because of it, how would we ever know His love? So, in an act that still makes angels rejoice in awe, God did both. He upheld justice and unleashed mercy. He sent Jesus to the courtroom— not as the lawyer, but as the one who would stand in your place . Can you imagine that courtroom scene? The gavel pounds. Guilty. Your list of charges is long: pride, envy, impatience, every time you rolled your eyes in traffic or withheld forgiveness one more day. The law is clear. The fine is steep. The sentence is death. But just as you’re led away, Jesus stands. “I’ll take it,” He says. And the Judge—who is also your Father—lets Him. Justice is satisfied. Mercy is magnified. And you? You walk out free. Who does that? Who both judges and justifies?  Only God. Only grace. You were guilty. But Jesus stood in. You were condemned. Now you are called righteous—because the Judge took your sentence and gave you His Son. And that changes everything.

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Romans

Romans Chapter 2 - Mirror Mirror On the Wall

There is a colleague in my office.  He can spot the flaw in every one else - except the one in the mirror. Let's call him Rick.  Rick was the kind of guy who could tell you what was wrong with your plan while not coming up with anything new.  He critique's everyone's work - except his own.  If someone was late to a meeting, it was disrespectful.  But when Rick was late?  "Traffic!" of course! We all know of a Rick. Some of us are Rick, on Tuesdays. Paul, in Romans 2, had something to say about this. “You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things” (Romans 2:1, NIV). It’s as if God holds up a mirror—not to shame us, but to show us. He’s not asking for guilt-trips or self-loathing. He’s simply saying: Take a look. A real one. No filters. No excuses. Just truth. And here’s the kicker: God doesn’t hold up a mirror to mock you. He holds it up to free you. We judge others by actions, but we want to be judged by intentions. I snap at my wife and say, “Sorry, long day.” But when someone snaps at me? “Well, someone skipped their morning prayers.” We excuse ourselves with grace, but hand out judgment like a judge on Britain's Got Talent. Romans 2 says that when we judge, we condemn ourselves because we’re doing the same things — just maybe not as loudly. It reminds me of the time my daughter caught me sneaking a Coke Zero after telling that it's not good for her. “Is that a can of Coke in your mouth, Father?” she asked, eyebrows raised. “It's just that I am thirsty,” I mumbled sheepishly. Caught. Mirror, meet Father. God asks us to be perfect. He also asks us to be honest. He knows that judging others builds walls, but examining ourselves builds bridges.  God wants us to act differently.  One where we lose the lecture and speak with love.  One where we choose humility over hypocrisy. One where we admit that sometimes the biggest work God needs to do isn’t in them — it’s in me. When we read Romans 2:1-3, let us not look at it as if it is a finger pointing at you.  Look at it as if it's a hand reaching toward you. God’s kindness doesn’t expose to shame you — it exposes to save you.  He doesn’t bring truth to rub it in, but to rub it out.  And when we stop trying to fix everyone else and start letting Him fix us? That’s when the real miracle begins. So next time you’re tempted to judge someone else’s mess, remember this: You might be looking through a window. But God is holding up a mirror. And hopefully and thankfully, in that mirror, He sees not just what’s wrong — but what He’s making right.

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Romans

Romans Chapter 1 - Ashamed of the Gospel?

Have we ever felt ashamed of the gospel? Paul certainly didn’t - he makes that clear not only in his writings in Romans, but in his very life and how he chose to lead it.

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Malachi

Malachi Chapter 4 - For man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart

“not a result of works, so that no one may boast. For we are His workmanship…”

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Malachi

Malachi Chapter 3 - Written in His Book

Amid God's rebukes, let us reflect on God's enduring faithfulness which He demonstrates in this chapter.

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Malachi

Malachi Chapter 1 - Our Relationship with God

A reflection on the state of our relationship with God

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Zechariah

Zechariah Chapter 14 - Finishing off, or Filtering? 

What will God do with His people in the last days?  

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